Autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) is a severe liver disease with high mortality rates if left untreated. Current treatments, while effective, are associated with deleterious side-effects. These side effects are specific to each drug and the result of broad immunosuppression. Recently, a murine model of type 2 AIH has been created in our laboratory in wild-type naïve mice. In this model, DNA immunization with type 2 AIH human autoantigens breaks immune tolerance and induces an autoimmune response against the liver. Lately, new therapeutic strategies based on depletion of specific immune cell populations have been proposed for the treatment of several diseases, including autoimmune diseases. Currently, no immunotherapies using biological agents are available for the treatment of autoimmune liver diseases. Therefore, the goal of this project is to study the efficacy of new immunotherapeutic agents for the treatment of type 2 AIH in an experimental model. We evaluated the effectiveness of two approaches for treating type 2 AIH. First, we tested the anti-CD3ε antibody in prophylaxis and in treatment of type 2 AIH. We showed that a dosage of 5µg i.v. of anti-CD3ε antibody per day for 5 consecutive days induced remission in mice with established type 2 AIH. This remission was defined as a normalization of serum alanine aminostransferase levels and a significant decrease of liver inflammation in treated mice. This remission seems to be associated with a transitory depletion of CD3+ T lymphocytes in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and increased CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ regulatory T lymphocytes in the liver. But when this dosage was applied in prophylaxis, it could not prevent the induction of type 2 AIH. The second approach was to induce tolerance by nasal administration of murin formiminotransferase cyclodeaminase (mFTCD), an autoantigen of type 2 AIH. We showed that nasal administration of 100µg of mFTCD for 3 consecutive days prevented development of type 2 AIH in prophylaxis by reducing liver inflammation.